Water and Biological MacromoleculesWesthof Water and Biological Macromolecules presents an excellent description of the structural aspects of water molecules around biological macromolecules. Topics discussed include the properties of water in solid and liquid states; proteins, nucleic acids, polysaccharides, and lipids; and theoretical approaches for understanding the macroscopic observations and integrating microscopic descriptions. The nature and roles of hydration forces in macromolecular complexation and cell-cell interactions are explained, in addition to phenomena such as entropy-enthalpy compensation and the thermodynamic treatment of water bridging. Water and Biological Macromolecules will be a valuable reference for biophysicists, biochemists, and macromolecular biologists. |
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Page 376
... repulsion , and even give rise to a net intermem- brane attraction ( Colbow and Jones , 1974 ; Kjellander , 1984 ; Podgornik , 1989 ; Kornyshev and Leikin 1989 ; Leikin and Kornyshev , 1990 , 1991 ) . Short - range coupling between such ...
... repulsion , and even give rise to a net intermem- brane attraction ( Colbow and Jones , 1974 ; Kjellander , 1984 ; Podgornik , 1989 ; Kornyshev and Leikin 1989 ; Leikin and Kornyshev , 1990 , 1991 ) . Short - range coupling between such ...
Page 415
... repulsion is propagated some appreciable dis- tance beyond the very close range of direct hydrogen bonds ( see above ) , the hydration orientation decreases exponentially with distance , and the result is the decay of polar repulsion ...
... repulsion is propagated some appreciable dis- tance beyond the very close range of direct hydrogen bonds ( see above ) , the hydration orientation decreases exponentially with distance , and the result is the decay of polar repulsion ...
Page 417
... repulsion due to hydration forces which is mainly responsible for the cells ' stability ( van Oss , 1989a , 1990a ) . In the same manner , stabiliza- tion of hydrophobic particles occurs through the repulsive hydration forces which ...
... repulsion due to hydration forces which is mainly responsible for the cells ' stability ( van Oss , 1989a , 1990a ) . In the same manner , stabiliza- tion of hydrophobic particles occurs through the repulsive hydration forces which ...
Contents
Water structure | 3 |
Thermodynamic and dynamic properties of water | 45 |
Aqueous solutions of simple hydrophobic solutes | 55 |
Copyright | |
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Acta Cryst analysis anionic aqueous atoms B-DNA B-form backbone base pairs Beveridge binding Biochemistry Biochim Biol Biomol Biophys Biopolymers calculations Cevc chain Chem Clementi complex conformation counterions crystal structure crystalline crystallographic d(CGCGAATTCGCG density distance dodecamer electron electrostatic Equation experimental Figure force field free energy function Gibbs energy Goodfellow H-bond helix hydration hydration forces hydration shell hydrogen bonds hydrophilic hydrophobic ice Ih interactions interfacial ions lipid bilayers lipid headgroups liquid macromolecules MD simulation membrane minor groove mJ/m² molecular dynamics Molecular dynamics simulation Monte Carlo neutron diffraction nucleic acids nucleotide orientation oxygen phase phosphate groups phosphatidylcholine phospholipid Phys polar polymer polysaccharides potential refinement region relaxation repulsive residues resolution Saenger side-chains solution solvation solvation Gibbs energy solvent solvent molecules solvent structure ẞ-sheet stability Struct studies surface temperature tion water bridges water molecules water structure Westhof X-ray Z-DNA